U.S. Senate Votes to End Record-long Government Shutdown
The U.S. Senate voted on Monday to approve legislation aimed at ending the record-long federal government shutdown, marking a key step toward reopening services.
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The U.S. Senate voted on Monday to approve legislation aimed at ending the record-long federal government shutdown, marking a key step toward reopening services.
New YouGov poll finds 35% of Americans blame Republicans, 32% blame Democrats, as U.S. government shutdown enters sixth week.
A 38-day U.S. government shutdown forces FAA to cut 10% of flights at 40 major airports, delaying thousands of passengers just before Thanksgiving.
On his reelection anniversary, President Trump spoke at the America Business Forum in Miami, touting his economic agenda amid the longest U.S. government shutdown.
The US federal government has entered its longest shutdown ever, a stark reminder of how deep political divisions can stall essential services and impact everyday Americans.
As the U.S. shutdown hits 31 days—the second-longest in history—a CBO report warns up to $14B in permanent GDP loss if delays persist another month.
US air traffic controllers demanded an end to the government shutdown on Oct. 28 as they still haven’t been paid, raising concerns over understaffing and flight safety.
The U.S. government shutdown has forced the NNSA to furlough 1,400 nuclear security staff, marking a new hit to defense readiness amid political gridlock.
As the US enters its third shutdown in 12 years, 1.3M active-duty service personnel and their families face paycheck gaps and are turning to food banks for support.